The train shed between Parque La Plancha and the old train station, before renovations began. Photo: Courtesy

Construction of a school for the arts is under way behind train station in December 2018. Photo: Lee Steele

Western-most buildings at the train station have yet to be renovated. Photo: Lee Steele

Construction of a school for the arts is under way behind train station in December 2018. Photo: Lee Steele

The old train station, now an art school, on Calle 55 and 48. Photo: Lee Steele

A rendering from Gran Plancha A.C. shows the overall scheme at La Plancha.

Construction of a school for the arts is under way behind train station in December 2018. Photo: Lee Steele

La Plancha's first-stage master plan.

Merida, Yucatan — While the land set aside for a park remains barren, the old train station is expanding space for the arts school that it houses.

A new shed connects train tracks to the historic train station, where the Higher School of Arts of Yucatán at La Plancha attracts visual artists.

The overhang resembles the original 1920s structure, with INAH making sure designs and materials are as true as possible to the original, said Jack Robinson, who for years has promoted turning the land into a park.

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The old warehouses to the east and west of the tracks are being rebuilt. To the east will be music classes, and the dance school will be to the west. Another line of abandoned warehouses further to the east have not been touched, but will possibly incorporate a drama school, as the state consolidates its arts colleges, said Robinson.

The progress was noted by a handful of guests recently invited to tour the construction site.

The tracks and platform between the warehouses will be a common space, and connect the school to the Gran Parque La Plancha, where acres of railroad yards are to be converted into a “Central Park.”

But work on those grounds appears halted since the new state government has taken hold. Old rail cars and debris are still visible from Calle 48.

Proponents of the project hail the concept for bringing green space to the center of the city, as well as being a new venue for cultural activities. But government officials have made no public statements to assure neighbors of the project’s future.